U.S. Utilities Spent $5.3 Billion on Energy Efficiency
Programs in 2009
EERE Network News - Feb. 25, 2010
U.S. utilities increased their spending on energy efficiency programs by
43% in 2009, according to a new report from the nonprofit Consortium for
Energy Efficiency (CEE), which represents energy efficiency program
administrators from across the United States and Canada. U.S. utility
spending on energy efficiency programs reached $5.3 billion, including
$4.4 billion for electric energy efficiency programs and $930 million
for natural gas programs. Spending on natural gas programs increased the
most, at 79%, while electric programs increased by 38%. Utility energy
efficiency programs also expanded geographically, as such programs are
now offered in 46 states, compared to only 37 states in 2008. The CEE
report notes that electric energy efficiency spending grew the fastest
in the Southeast and South Central states, with a 76% increase to $800
million in 2009. For instance, new legislation in Maryland increased
electric energy efficiency spending by a factor of 13, while Kentucky
increased its spending by an order of magnitude and Tennessee's spending
increased by a factor of 5. Electric energy efficiency programs focus a
majority of their spending on commercial and industrial facilities,
while natural gas programs are skewed more toward residential customers.
Such energy efficiency programs are expected to keep U.S. greenhouse
gas (GHG) emissions in check over the next 20 years, but long-term costs
have been underestimated, according to Bloomberg New Energy Finance.
Even in the absence of new carbon reduction policies, the market
research firm predicts that the United States will exploit readily
available residential and industrial efficiency gains to achieve a 2%
drop in GHG emissions by 2030. But once those simpler options are used
up, the cost for further cuts will rise more steeply than previously
thought. To achieve the Obama Administration's goal of a 17% cut by 2020
would require more fundamental changes to the power and transport
sectors, but costs can still be held to less than $1 per day per U.S.
household, according to Bloomberg New Energy Finance. The report calls
for new, more aggressive policies by the United States to help speed
energy technology improvements and lower the long-term costs of cutting
GHG emissions.
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